APRIL 4, TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS OGRAN Bonnie Fave Rome" The Night M air on G St PAGE THREE Lesson. M ment of , radio inst Lesson. Ma nt of roma instructor 4 state Geoloc e Kansas S and Agricul 200,000 gal/ develope square m ng rates of in as much as Iv Kansa oper of OF KANSAS KANSAS EANNE SHOEMA JEAN JON RUTH TIP ORIGINIA GUNSOU LOUSE ROSSINE MACKI GULL, WIL NAT KGITL CHARLES MOFFT CHARLES MOFFT AIDI SCHMITTEN ACQUELINE NODI FAFE ETTY LOU PERK ... RUTH KREBE Journalism Banquet Will Be Tomorrow Night at the Colonial The annual departmental "Zilch dinner" for journalism students and faculty members will be tomorrow night at 6:30, at the Colonial Tea Room. Dean Sims, College senior, will preside as master of ceremonies, and will introduce the main speaker, the mythical Eleanor Zilch, wife of Elmer Zilch, patron saint of University of Kansas journalism students. Tickets for the dinner may be bought from Carol Stuart, Jane and Jean Jones, or from the Business office, Betty Lou Perkins, chairman of the University Daily Kansan board, has announced. Alpha Chi Omega overnight guests last night were Peggy Miller of Kansas City, Mo., and Huenge Guessford of Sioux Falls, S. D. Battenfield Hall guests over the weekend were Jack Justice, L. J. Carbough, and Billy Van Diver, all of Washington; Bob Harris and Arthur Seckman of Newton; and John Sells, a former resident. Watkins Hall—Guests at a formal dance Saturday evening were Rex Goudy, Bill Lasoorski, Edgar Thomas, Eldon Kordes, Gene Allen, Charles Delano, John Hawley, Lyle Wonderlich, William Larsen, Tony Wauro, Merle Brehm, Deane Posthlaite, Robert Stewart, Paul Adams, John Basnett, Tom Purdue, Dewey Nemec, James Weatherby Max Musgrave was a visitor Sunday. Cecil Hudson, Fred Knoche, Bob Campbell, Charles Harkness, Harry Holch, Clinton Davies, Eid Robrahn, Ralph Morse, Joe Gray, Warren Jacks, Lew Purinton, August Flemming and Clarence Miller Westminster Hall — Peggy Botkin was a weekend guest. Catherine Bush was a Sunday dinner guest. Chi Omega entertained the following guests at its bi-annual Eleusinian banquet last night: Mrs. Rice Phelps, Mrs. Edwin Phelps, Mrs. Soalem Emery, Mrs. L. O. Foster, Mrs. R. S. Filkin, Mrs. Arthur Inman, Mrs. Ulysses Ribel, and Mrs. John Hankins. Delta Upson—Bob Fountain was a dinner guest yesterday. Pi Beta Phi has announced the initiation of the following: Patricia Jean Tuller, El Paso, Texas; Jean Stodard, Burlingame; Martha Lou Cable, Kansas City; Mary Marsh, Emporia; June Plumb, Newton; Elaine Wyman, Hutchinson; Laura Sifers, Iola; Caroline Carson, Wichita; Edith Marie Darby, Kansas City; Margaret Hardie, Carlinville, Ill.; Betty Jean Grant, Wichita; Patricia Jo Horner, Kansas City; Jean Saffell, Lawrence; Mary Margaret Sanderson, Lawrence; Dorothy Rose Stodder, Wichita; and Shirley McGinness, Kansas City, Mo. A dinner followed initiation services, which were held last Saturday. Barbara Brundage Marries Lieutenant Mrs William Y. Morgan of Hutchinson has announced the marriage of her granddaughter, Barbara Broundage, to Lt. William Luke Fry of the Army Air Corps. The wedding took place on Thursday, March 23, in Hutchinson. The bride, a former student here, was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. They are now living in Fresno, Calif., where Lt. Fry is stationed. Chancellor and Mrs. Desne W. Malott will be guests of honor at a dinner to be given April 25, by the KU Club of Kansas City. Mrs. Grace Sasky, Buelah Horner, and Mrs. O. H. Horner all of Kansas City, and A/¢ Robert Jess and Robert Miller were dinner guests Sunday. Malotts to Be Guests At KU Club Dinner Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Hepworth and daughter, Jo Ann, of Burlingame, were visitors Sunday afternoon. Dinner guests last night included: Miss-Peg Warner, Lawrence; Mrs. Charles Warren, Billings, Mont.; Mrs. Charlene Fitzpatrick, Lawrence, and Eugenia Jacard. Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Ens. Richard V. Ramsey, a former chapter member from El Dorado, was a weekend guest. Tau Kappa Epsilon dinner guests last night were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hauge and daughter, Janice, of Kansas City, Mo. Triangle had a dinner Sunday night at the Hearth. ISA Initiates Installs Officers At Council Dinner Initiation of new Independent Student Association Council members and installation of officers took place last night at the ISA Council dinner at the Colonial Tea Room. Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner were guests. John Sells, outgoing president, spoke of the past year's activities, and then administered the oath of the presidency to Don Alderson. New members who took the oath of membership were Dick Hartzel, Marie Larson, Ronald Johnson, Emily Hollis, Cynthia Smith, Jo Ann Roberts, and Harlan McDowell. Dean Werner gave a brief, informal talk on the history of the ISA organization. Returning council members are Esther DeBord and Dorothy Cooper. University Women's Club To Have Meeting Thursday The annual business meeting of the University Women's Club will be held at 3 p.m., Thursday, at Myers Hall. The May picnic will be postponed this year until the early part of June. Prof. J. W. Ashton of the English department will present a program on English Ballads at the meeting Thursday. Co-hostesses of the gathering will be Mrs. F. A. Russell and Mrs. Don Haines. — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — Zilch Keeps Up Tradition By Proxy Pup tent in one hand, six shooter in the other, Elmer A. Zillch, grand old man of journalism arrived in Lawrence on Feb. 26, 1942. It was his first visit to the Middle West. His coming, impeded by vast street demonstrations in New York, Chicago, and Eudora, was hailed as the greatest event in Lawrence history since Quantrill's raid. The far-famed journalist, discoverer of type lice and inventor of the Zilch Zippy Linotype, had been in hiding in the mountains of Tibet since the repeal of the 18th amendment as a gesture of protest. At a dinner given March 1, 1942, Mr. Zilch was the guest of honor. Speaking to journalism students and professors, the former editor of the New York Daily Peet and Bleat said "Journalism is journalism nad facts are facts and never the twain shall meet." On April 9, 1942, word again came that Zilch was leaving Tibet and his own private still to be a guest at the journalism department's annual dinner. After getting lost in the jungles of Borneo, Mr. Zilch finally made it for the 1942 dinner and spoke with his customary sagacity on the evils of the 18th amendment and the necessity for imagination in effective news writing. Last year Mr. Zilch left the fox- (continued to page four) ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Place Your Wire Orders EARLY Do it today --- Don't wait! Flowers by Wire ---- Early